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Messages - Wylie

#1
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 22, 2024, 04:26:59 AM
This morning I found Neomarica northiana open.
#2
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 11, 2024, 06:16:04 AM
Quote from: Uli on April 11, 2024, 12:57:27 AMThis Gladiolus is flowering for the very first time with me, raised from seed. The label says G. carinatus which it is definitely not. About 60cm tall, leaning sideways.
The foliage is not hairy and some of the flowering shoots are branching. No detectable fragrance. Any idea of the ID?


I have the same thing and thought it was Gladiolus carneus.
#3
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 09, 2024, 12:13:08 AM
Quote from: Too Many Plants! on April 07, 2024, 09:24:55 AMHere's a better pic of my Moraea I previously posted. I believe this is one of the genera that was lumped into Moraea, and to me it doesn't look Moraea. An interesting story to go with...I had a patch of this yellow and peach planted together and had a gopher come through the patch during dormancy. When the next season came around only yellow was left, and it looked like he had not eaten any of the yellow, certainly very little if he did at all. So...my conclusion is the peach must taste good, and yellow must taste bad. 😂



It looks like Moraea ochroleuca (or Homeria ochroleuca). Mine is in bloom right now.
#4
Current Photographs / Re: March 2024
March 29, 2024, 03:37:05 AM
Babianas do very well in the Azores. I had bought a pack of bulbs years ago, so I don't know which ones these are. They have been allowed to mix, drop seed, and grow.

One of the first Moraea bulbs I got was Moraea ochroleuca. They settle into the ground very well.

There is also the white version of Scilla peruviana.
#5
Current Photographs / Re: March 2024
March 19, 2024, 08:44:52 AM
Homeria flaccida
#6
Current Photographs / Re: March 2024
March 06, 2024, 08:42:32 AM
It's Hippeastrum time and leading the way is Hippeastrum papilio.
#7
General Discussion / Re: Private exchanges
March 03, 2024, 01:03:02 AM
Quote from: Diane Whitehead on March 02, 2024, 09:58:50 AMWylie,

You could just exchange pollen - a lot easier than exchanging a bulb.
Normally, that would be a good idea, but my Paramongaia w. blooms in October, earlier than a lot of the others people have. The foliage is starting to die back and I can see how many there are, but I think I have 3 offsets. Donating just 1 bulb to the regular exchange wouldn't be fair to anyone.
#8
General Discussion / Re: Private exchanges
March 02, 2024, 02:45:10 AM
I have been wondering how I could arrange an exchange for a certain bulb I have that just produced offsets. It requires a different bulb that it not closely related to to produce seeds, so it would be an exchange with someone that has the same. A place where we could do that would be helpful, especially when there is only 1 bulb we are willing to part with. 
#9
Current Photographs / March 2024
March 01, 2024, 10:25:01 AM
Here is a nice way to start the month, Ferraria crispa.
#10
Current Photographs / Re: February 2024
February 06, 2024, 01:27:22 AM
First Ferraria divaricata and Dietes grandiflora starting to bloom again.
#11
Mine is doing fine with temperatures between 10°C to 18°C, which is the normal for the Azores. The first year it bloomed, it was about this time, and then it moved to October. I give it no water during late spring/summer, which means I bring it inside, and then put it out mid-August. Mine originally came from Great Britain, and at the time I had to choose either a winter or a summer growing bulb and chose the winter as the Azores is great for the winter growers. I keep hoping that one year it will divide.
#12
Current Photographs / Re: November 2023 photos
November 13, 2023, 02:07:50 AM
Quote from: Martin Bohnet on November 09, 2023, 07:54:49 PMabsolutely possible - I've never had seeds on the wide crosses like xAmarine and xAmacrinum. To be fair I don't have any other related amaryllids in flower when the Amacrinum is.
I have some bulbs growing that were a result of crossing xAmarine with Amaryllis belladonna. If it would stop raining, I want to try a xAmarine with Nerine sarniensis since both are in flower.
#13
Current Photographs / Re: October 2023 photos
October 10, 2023, 01:39:25 AM
It started growing last month as the temperatures started to drop, around 23°C. The flower spike comes up really fast, then the foliage will start to go dormant in January. It doesn't really get below 10°C or above 27° in the summer in the Azores. After it goes dormant, I take the pot inside so the pot doesn't bake in the sun and everything dries out for the summer. The first couple of years there were no flowers, but it finally bloomed.
#14
Current Photographs / Re: October 2023 photos
October 09, 2023, 06:37:14 AM
I bought the bulb on eBay.co.uk before Brexit happened. It was very small - about the size of a large garbanzo bean. It took 3 years for the first flower. Last year I tried the microwaved pollen method to get a seed, but it failed.
#15
Current Photographs / Re: October 2023 photos
October 08, 2023, 06:19:51 AM
This came up really fast and opened today. Of course it is Paramongaia weberbaueri.